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Hi I'm new, 6 y/o son has severe ODD (? CD)
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<blockquote data-quote="Josie" data-source="post: 415108" data-attributes="member: 1792"><p>I know it sounds incredible and it might not be the case for your son, but my daughter's ODD was caused by gluten and casein (milk) intolerance.</p><p> </p><p>If that is your son's problem, you wouldn't notice after eating that he was worse, probably, because gluten and milk are in pretty much everything processed.</p><p> </p><p>My daughter was violent and I was thinking she would have to go to an Residential Treatment Center (RTC). I actually called around to see what was out there for her, but we weren't quite ready to do it.</p><p> </p><p>My younger daughter had stomach problems which we discovered was due to gluten and milk. This led to us testing the rest of the family. We were all positive also. Putting my older daughter on the girlfriend/CF diet was a miracle and turned her into a regular kid. We were able to wean her off her medications and we could parent her like the books say we should.</p><p> </p><p>She's now a teen and cheats on her diet some and turns back into the difficult child she was. Luckily, she recognizes this and controls herself better now than she did and gets herself back on the diet.</p><p> </p><p>From my google "research", RAST testing tests for IgE antibodies to foods. There are other antibodies that can be tested. The test we used tested for IgA antibodies but only to gluten, casein, soy, and eggs. We also did another test for IgG antibodies for my younger daughter for more foods. I don't think that one was very accurate since it said wheat was not a problem for her and there is no doubt that it is.</p><p> </p><p>I think the best way to determine a food allergy is to eliminate suspicious foods and see what happens. You do have to remove all traces of it or it might not work. I needed the test for me to be motivated enough to do it, though. What convinced me, though, were the results. The test is not mainstream medicine and would be easy to dismiss if I didn't notice improvement.</p><p> </p><p>It could be genetic and that his father also has gluten intolerance causing his problems. 4 generations in my family have it. </p><p> </p><p>I know this sounds outrageous and I would never have believed it myself, if I hadn't seen it for myself.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Josie, post: 415108, member: 1792"] I know it sounds incredible and it might not be the case for your son, but my daughter's ODD was caused by gluten and casein (milk) intolerance. If that is your son's problem, you wouldn't notice after eating that he was worse, probably, because gluten and milk are in pretty much everything processed. My daughter was violent and I was thinking she would have to go to an Residential Treatment Center (RTC). I actually called around to see what was out there for her, but we weren't quite ready to do it. My younger daughter had stomach problems which we discovered was due to gluten and milk. This led to us testing the rest of the family. We were all positive also. Putting my older daughter on the girlfriend/CF diet was a miracle and turned her into a regular kid. We were able to wean her off her medications and we could parent her like the books say we should. She's now a teen and cheats on her diet some and turns back into the difficult child she was. Luckily, she recognizes this and controls herself better now than she did and gets herself back on the diet. From my google "research", RAST testing tests for IgE antibodies to foods. There are other antibodies that can be tested. The test we used tested for IgA antibodies but only to gluten, casein, soy, and eggs. We also did another test for IgG antibodies for my younger daughter for more foods. I don't think that one was very accurate since it said wheat was not a problem for her and there is no doubt that it is. I think the best way to determine a food allergy is to eliminate suspicious foods and see what happens. You do have to remove all traces of it or it might not work. I needed the test for me to be motivated enough to do it, though. What convinced me, though, were the results. The test is not mainstream medicine and would be easy to dismiss if I didn't notice improvement. It could be genetic and that his father also has gluten intolerance causing his problems. 4 generations in my family have it. I know this sounds outrageous and I would never have believed it myself, if I hadn't seen it for myself. [/QUOTE]
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Hi I'm new, 6 y/o son has severe ODD (? CD)
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